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CHINA WILLING TO HELP PAKISTAN OVER FISCAL CRISIS

- AP

Beijing -— Close ally China said Saturday it was willing to offer assistance to Pakistan to help it weather its current fiscal woes but that terms of such aid are still being discussed.

That followed a meeting in Beijing between Chinese Premier Li Keqiang and Pakistan's newly elected Prime Minister Imran Khan, who met the previous day with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Pakistan's growing fiscal crisis has raised questions about its ability to repay Chinese loans granted as part of Beiing's “Belt and Road” infrastruc­ture initiative.

Pakistan has taken out billions of dollars in loans from China in recent years, the terms of which remain largely undisclose­d. China has pledged a total of more than $60 billion to Pakistan in the form of loans and investment­s for roads, ports, power plants and industrial parks to build what is termed the “China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.”

Following Li's meeting with Khan, Vice Foreign Minister Kong Xuanyou said the sides had “made it clear in principal that the Chinese government will provide necessary support and assistance to Pakistan in tiding over the current economic difficulti­es.

“As for the specific measures to be taken, the competent authoritie­s of the two sides will have detailed discussion­s,” Kong told reporters.

And despite Pakistan's looming balance of payments crisis, Kong said there were no plans to scale back the economic corridor, known as CPEC, although he did say it would be altered somewhat to “tilt in favor of areas relating to people's lives.”

“There's been no change in the number of CPEC projects. If there were to be any change, it would be an increase going forward,” he said.

In response to the debt crisis, Pakistan is seeking an emergency bailout loan of $8 billion from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, which plans to send a team to Islamabad to assess the situation. It is also seeking new loans from Saudi Arabia and China. Discussion­s of the new funding were expected to dominate Khan's visit.

Further complicati­ng matters, the United States, which strongly influences the IMF, has said it will not finance the repayment of Pakistan's Chinese loans.

Pakistani media earlier reported China was preparing a $6 billion package of aid, including loans and additional investment for CPEC.

The issue did not come up in opening remarks between Li and Khan. /

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